Menu Right

Pages

Top Social Icons

Responsive Full Width Ad

Left Sidebar

Left Sidebar

Featured News

Right Sidebar

Right Sidebar

Adobe Illustrator

Iphone

Marshmallow Android 6.0

15:03
-
Unknown
-
0
Comments

Whether you like them straight out of the bag, roasted to a golden brown exterior with a molten center, or in fluff form,
who doesn’t like marshmallows? We definitely like them! Since the
launch of the M Developer Preview at Google I/O in May, we’ve enjoyed
all of your participation and feedback. Today with the final Developer
Preview update, we're introducing the official Android 6.0 SDK and opening Google Play for publishing your apps that target the new API level 23 in Android Marshmallow.

Get your apps ready for Android Marshmallow

The final Android 6.0 SDK is now available to download via the SDK Manager in Android Studio.
With the Android 6.0 SDK you have access to the final Android APIs and
the latest build tools so that you can target API 23. Once you have
downloaded the Android 6.0 SDK into Android Studio, update your app
project compileSdkVersion to 23 and you are ready to test your app with the new platform. You can also update your app to targetSdkVersion to 23 test out API 23 specific features like auto-backup and app permissions.
Along with the Android 6.0 SDK, we also updated the Android Support Library
to v23. The new Android Support library makes it easier to integrate
many of the new platform APIs, such as permissions and fingerprint
support, in a backwards-compatible manner. This release contains a
number of new support libraries including: customtabs, percent, recommendation, preference-v7, preference-v14, and preference-leanback-v17.

Check your App Permissions

Along with the new platform features like fingerprint support and Doze power saving mode, Android Marshmallow features a new permissions model
that streamlines the app install and update process. To give users this
flexibility and to make sure your app behaves as expected when an
Android Marshmallow user disables a specific permission, it’s important
that you update your app to target API 23, and test the app thoroughly
with Android Marshmallow users.

How to Get the Update

The Android emulator system images and developer preview system
images have been updated for supported Nexus devices (Nexus 5, Nexus 6,
Nexus 9 & Nexus Player) to help with your testing. You can download
the device system images from the developer preview site.
Also, similar to the previous developer update, supported Nexus devices
will receive an Over-the-Air (OTA) update over the next couple days.
Although the Android 6.0 SDK is final, the devices system images are
still developer preview versions. The preview images are near final but
they are not intended for consumer use. Remember that when Android 6.0
Marshmallow launches to the public later this fall, you'll need to
manually re-flash your device to a factory image to continue to receive consumer OTA updates for your Nexus device.

What is New

Compared to the previous developer preview update, you will find this
final API update fairly incremental. You can check out all the API
differences here, but a few of the changes since the last developer update include:

Android Platform Change:

Final Permissions User Interface — we updated the permissions user interface and enhanced some of the permissions behavior.

Upload your Android Marshmallow apps to Google Play

Google Play is now ready to accept your API 23 apps via the Google
Play Developer Console on all release channels (Alpha, Beta &
Production). At the consumer launch this fall, the Google Play store
will also be updated so that the app install and update process supports
the new permissions model for apps using API 23.
To make sure that your updated app runs well on Android Marshmallow and older versions, we recommend that you use Google Play’s newly improved beta testing feature to get early feedback, then do a staged rollout as you release the new version to all users.

We finally have the gooey answer to the Android M conundrum and it’s Marshmallow.
Not a major shock, it was always a front-runner, but some people have
been surprised by the fact that Marshmallow will be version 6.0 of
Android and not 5.2 or 5.5. Should a whole number leap imply some major
overhaul? Why is Google jumping straight to 6.0? There are various
possible reasons.

It never made sense

Did Google’s version system ever really make sense? Anyone who has
worked with programmers will understand the often arbitrary nature of
version numbers. Traditionally, the first number is supposed to mark a
major version and the second number a minor version, but that’s just a
general convention, it’s not an unbreakable rule. In practice, version
numbers often just mark the point that something was pushed out the
door. They’re useful because they make it possible to track down
problems later, but they don’t really tell the end user anything, and
they’re not really meant to.
Let’s take a brief look at the historical line-up of Android versions:

Android 1.0

Android 1.1

Android 1.5 Cupcake

Android 1.6 Donut

Android 2.0 Éclair

Android 2.2 Froyo

Android 2.3 Gingerbread

Android 3.0 Honeycomb

Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich

Android 4.1 (4.2, 4.3) Jelly Bean

Android 4.4 Kitkat

Android 5.0 Lollipop

Take a look through the versions and try to find a pattern that
establishes consistently why some versions are whole number leaps and
others aren’t. The closest you could argue is probably that whole
numbers indicate an aesthetic leap, but Éclair didn’t really and
Marshmallow won’t either. What does it matter when the system never
really made sense anyway?
The dessert names are for users, marking larger leaps of style and
function, but even the incremental updates within names have sometimes
delivered more than just bug fixes. There’s no real consistency there.